International

  • June 26, 2024

    Medical Device Co. To Pay $935K Atty Fees In Tax Fraud Suit

    A medical equipment company's leaders will pay $935,000 in attorney fees to investors' counsel after mediating a settlement in a proposed class action alleging the company breached fiduciary duty in failing to disclose its former CEO's involvement in a tax fraud dispute with Denmark.

  • June 26, 2024

    Kenya President Backs Off Finance Bill After Fatal Protests

    Kenyan President William Ruto said Wednesday that he will withdraw a controversial finance bill that included tax hikes that inspired mass protests, including storming the country's Parliament building leaving multiple people dead, according to local news reports.

  • June 26, 2024

    EU Justice Head Loses Bid To Lead Human Rights Group

    The European Union's justice commissioner failed in his bid to lead a European human rights organization and returned Wednesday from his leave of absence for the remaining four months of his term as commissioner.

  • June 26, 2024

    EU State Auditors Must Respect Tax Incentives, Lawyer Says

    European Union countries need to make sure that their tax authorities are supporting incentive programs, such as those related to research and development, rather than interpreting laws in inconsistent ways, a tax lawyer said Wednesday.

  • June 26, 2024

    Irish Pick New Finance Minister After Former Heads To EU

    Ireland picked a current junior minister as its new finance minister, the ministry confirmed to Law360 on Wednesday, one day after the government nominated the outgoing finance minister to serve on the next European Commission. 

  • June 25, 2024

    US Needs To Broaden Tax Base, Increase Rates, OECD Says

    The United States' debt-to-gross-domestic-product ratio is the highest it's been since World War II, necessitating a wide range of tax changes to both expand the tax base and increase rates to alleviate fiscal pressures, the OECD said Tuesday.

  • June 25, 2024

    Pharma Co. Teva To Pay Israel $750M In Tax Debt Settlement

    Israel-based multinational Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. reached an agreement with the Israel Tax Authority to settle 12 years' worth of pending tax litigation by paying $750 million over the course of five years, the company said Tuesday.

  • June 25, 2024

    Asia, Pacific Tax-To-GDP Ratio Returns To Pre-COVID Level

    Tax revenue in Asia and the Pacific rebounded to pre-pandemic levels in 2022 thanks to boosts in tourism and commodity prices, but the region's average tax-to-gross domestic product ratio is still lagging behind the average OECD ratio, the group said Tuesday.

  • June 25, 2024

    Pension Plans Can't Escape $2B Danish Tax Fraud Dispute

    Two U.S. pension plans made an "extremely strained" contention that Denmark's tax administrator waited too long to accuse them of participating in a $2.1 billion fraud scheme, a New York federal judge said in declining to toss the case.

  • June 25, 2024

    Hong Kong, Armenia Reach Double-Tax Treaty Deal

    Hong Kong signed an agreement with Armenia on a treaty to prevent double taxation as part of a larger goal to establish such treaties with countries participating in China's Belt and Road global infrastructure project, Hong Kong's Inland Revenue Department said.

  • June 25, 2024

    Ex-DOJ Atty Among New Trio At Chamberlain Hrdlicka

    Chamberlain Hrdlicka White Williams & Aughtry has strengthened its tax controversy and litigation practice with the addition of three attorneys in Atlanta, including a former senior trial attorney in the Tax Division of the U.S. Department of Justice for more than three decades.

  • June 25, 2024

    J&J Counsel Urges OECD To Ease Burdens Of Global Min. Tax

    Counsel for Johnson & Johnson on Tuesday urged the OECD and government officials working on the Pillar Two global minimum corporate tax to consider more permanent safe harbor provisions to reduce the compliance burdens associated with the levy.

  • June 25, 2024

    Global Tax Overhaul Won't Squash Competition, US Rep. Says

    The global tax overhaul designed by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development won't eliminate countries competing for companies' investments, a U.S. House lawmaker said Tuesday.

  • June 25, 2024

    EU Leaders To Include Tax Revamp In 5-Year Plan, Draft Says

    A targeted makeover of the tax systems in European Union countries will be part of the bloc's top priorities for the next five years as it aims to improve business financing to sharpen its competitiveness, a draft document suggested.

  • June 25, 2024

    New EU Chair Hungary Eyes Talks On Corp. Tax, But No Deals

    Hungary, the incoming chair of meetings of European Union countries, plans to discuss energy taxation and several proposals on corporate taxation during the next six months but doesn't expect to reach any agreements, according to meeting agendas.

  • June 24, 2024

    Miner Wins $9.6M In Royalty Fight With Colombia

    An international tribunal ordered Colombia to pay $9.56 million to a British mining and metals company following a dispute over royalties collected on a nickel mine, as the tribunal concluded that there had been "irregularities" in the way the country calculated the amount due.

  • June 24, 2024

    UN Tax Work Threatens OECD's Progress, EU Official Says

    The United Nations' efforts to consider international tax issues risk upending the early finished work of countries negotiating a global tax plan at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a top European Commission tax official said Monday.

  • June 24, 2024

    Better Digital Tax Ban In Pillar 1 Treaty, Treasury Official Says

    The final text of a multilateral convention to implement the OECD-designed taxing rights overhaul will include improved language to eliminate existing digital services tax and prohibit prospective ones, a U.S. Treasury Department official said Monday.

  • June 24, 2024

    Loss Guidance Will Cover Pillar 2, IRS Official Says

    Forthcoming guidance to address U.S. tax issues with dual consolidated losses will also include language advising taxpayers how to account for those losses under the Pillar Two global minimum tax, the IRS' top international tax counsel said Monday.

  • June 24, 2024

    UN Tax Convention Should Be Crafted Carefully, NFTC Says

    The United Nations' work toward a framework convention on international tax cooperation is welcome but should be done carefully and with continued input from stakeholders, the National Foreign Trade Council said, providing specific areas of feedback.

  • June 24, 2024

    German Banker's Cum-Ex Trial Dropped Due To Health

    The former chairman of M.M. Warburg & Co. KGaA will not face trial for alleged dividend-tax evasion linked to cum-ex transactions spanning from 2006 to 2019 after a German court halted the trial due to his health, according to a Monday court statement.

  • June 24, 2024

    Asia Tax Transparency Generated €1.8B In Revenue In 2023

    Tax transparency measures in 13 Asian jurisdictions collected at least €1.8 billion ($1.9 billion) in extra tax revenue in 2023 alone as such mechanisms continue to be adopted in the region, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development reported Monday.

  • June 24, 2024

    EU Dodges Hungary To Send Ukraine €1.4B In Russian Profits

    European Union foreign ministers agreed Monday to send €1.4 billion ($1.5 billion) of windfall profits from frozen and immobilized Russian state assets in military support to Ukraine next month, finding a legal loophole to bypass a potential veto from Hungary.

  • June 24, 2024

    OECD Tax Plan Issues Still Being Hashed Out, US Official Says

    Both the global minimum corporate tax and taxing rights overhaul plans designed by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development have outstanding issues that stakeholders are attempting to resolve, a U.S. Treasury Department official said at a conference Monday.

  • June 24, 2024

    EU States Turn Down Transfer Pricing Proposal, Report Says

    European Union countries have declined to accept a new law on transfer pricing that the EU's executive proposed last year, a report published by the body representing EU member states showed Monday.

Expert Analysis

  • IRS Notice Clarifies R&E Amortization, But Questions Remain

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    The IRS and Treasury Department’s recent notice clarifying the treatment of specified research and experimental expenditures under Section 174 provides taxpayers and practitioners with substantive guidance, but it misses the mark in delineating which expenditures are amortizable, say attorneys at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • Preparing Your Legal Department For Pillar 2 Compliance

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    Multinational entities should familiarize themselves with Pillar Two of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s BEPs 2.0 project and prepare their internal legal tracking systems for related reporting requirements that may go into effect as early as January, says Daniel Robyn at Ernst & Young.

  • What Large Language Models Mean For Document Review

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    Courts often subject parties using technology assisted review to greater scrutiny than parties conducting linear, manual document review, so parties using large language models for document review should expect even more attention, along with a corresponding need for quality control and validation, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • Participating In Living History Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    My role as a baron in a living history group, and my work as volunteer corporate counsel for a book series fan association, has provided me several opportunities to practice in unexpected areas of law — opening doors to experiences that have nurtured invaluable personal and professional skills, says Matthew Parker at the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services.

  • Private Equity Owners Can Remedy Law Firms' Agency Issues

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    Nonlawyer, private-equity ownership of law firms can benefit shareholders and others vulnerable to governance issues such as disparate interests, and can in turn help resolve agency problems, says Michael Di Gennaro at The Law Practice Exchange.

  • How Taxpayers Can Prep As Justices Weigh Repatriation Tax

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    The U.S. Supreme Court might strike down the 2017 federal tax overhaul's corporate repatriation tax in Moore v. U.S., so taxpayers should file protective tax refund claims before the case is decided and repatriate previously taxed earnings that could become entangled in dubious potential Section 965 refunds, say Jenny Austin and Gary Wilcox at Mayer Brown.

  • OFAC Designation Prosecutions Are Constitutionally Suspect

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    Criminal prosecutions based on the Office of Foreign Assets Control’s sanctions-related listing decisions — made with nearly unfettered discretion through an opaque process — present several constitutional issues, so it is imperative that courts recognize additional rights of review, say Solomon Shinerock and Annika Conrad at Lewis Baach.

  • How The OECD Global Tax Proposal Could Affect M&A

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    Following agreement on the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s Pillar Two proposal to introduce a global minimum tax, domestic implementation is expected to have a significant impact on international M&A transactions, with financial modeling, deal structuring, risk allocation and joint venture arrangements likely to be affected, say lawyers at Freshfields.

  • UK Shares-Tax Proposals Offer Long-Awaited Modernization

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    The U.K. government's recent consultation on the introduction of a new tax on transactions in securities raises detailed legal and practical issues, but the prospect of a single digital stamp tax offering both streamlined legislation and administration will be welcomed, say Zoë Arnautov and Mark Sheiham at Simmons & Simmons.

  • IRS Foreign Tax Credit Pause Is Welcome Course Correction

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    A recent IRS notice temporarily suspending application of 2022 foreign tax credit regulations provides wanted relief for the many U.S. multinational companies and other taxpayers that otherwise face the risk of significant double taxation in their international operations, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.

  • IRS Criminal Probe Spells Uncertainty For Malta Pension Plans

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    The IRS’ recent scrutiny of Malta pension plan arrangements — and its unusual issuance of criminal administrative summonses — confirms that it views many of these plans as illegal tax evasion schemes, and the road ahead will not be smooth and steady for anyone involved, say attorneys at Kostelanetz.

  • IRS Announcement Will Aid Cos. In Buyback Tax Planning

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    Recent IRS transitional guidance regarding current requirements for reporting and payment of the stock repurchase excise tax will help corporate taxpayers make decisions about records retention and establishing reserves for future tax payments, say Xenia Garofalo and Kyle Colonna at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • Flawed Analysis Supports Common Law Tax Deficiency Ruling

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    The Colorado federal district court’s recent decision in Liberty Global, holding that the U.S. Department of Justice may assert a common law tax claim without the notice of tax deficiency required by the Internal Revenue Code, relies on a contorted reading of the statute and irrelevant case law, say Loren Opper and Christie Galinski at Miller Canfield.

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